Wealth Management

Guardian Life Insurance recently announced that Talcott Resolution Life Insurance Company will reinsure about $7.4 billion in variable annuity benefits. Most of the contracts have guaranteed living withdrawal benefits and death benefit riders. The deal is expected to close by the end of the year. While Guardian will still be responsible for meeting contract obligations, advisors may have to explain to their clients why a lesser-known company is backing the guarantees. Guardian stated that it pursued this deal to focus its capital on exploring additional opportunities. Talcott only started after the Great Recession, when Hartford Financial Services wanted to separate from its large annuity business. The firm was aquired by Sixth Street last year. This deal is especially noteworthy as pressure from low returns has been pushing companies to find ways to distance themselves from some types of annuity businesses.


Finsum: To focus its capital on additional opportunities, Guardian Life picked Talcott Resolution Life to reinsure $7.4 Billion in variable annuities.

Kestra Investment Management recently announced the launch of its first two model portfolios series. The portfolios, which are exclusively designed for financial professionals associated with Kestra, are structured to maximize opportunities for clients, by providing options based on a client’s risk preference, desire for growth, and tax sensitivity. Both portfolio series have tax-aware versions, are low-cost, and flexible to fit a wide range of client needs. The Strategic Series has a long-term focus with multiple risk profiles. It is designed to be an efficient, streamlined solution with low turnover while still maintaining exposure to potential economic growth. The Dynamic Series is more active and has a higher level of trading activity for investors looking to benefit from changes in economic and market trends. The Kestra Investment Management team will manage the model portfolios. The team will analyze potential investments, use a rigorous due diligence process to select the best-suited funds, monitor portfolio allocations to opportunistically make changes, and regularly rebalance those allocations to keep each portfolio model aligned with its goals.


Finsum: Kestra launched two model portfolio series, one with low turnover and another with a higher level of trading.

The advent of digital advice has not only made investing easier but has also allowed client interactions to become more seamless. With more client interactions moving online, do online content and advice still put a client's best interest first? That’s a question the SEC, industry lawyers, and other regulators are contemplating. While online firms such as Robinhood came under scrutiny for gamifying investor behavior, something as simple as an investment calculator on an advisor website can be construed as a recommendation. Last August, the SEC issued a request for comment about broker-dealers’ and investment advisors’ digital engagement practices. Keith Kessel, a senior principal consultant at ACA Group, told Financial Advisor IQ that the SEC “is trying to ascertain in what set of scenarios would a recommendation or solicitation exist versus what are those engagement practices that are outside of the purview of the scope of the solicitation of the suitability rule and/or Regulation Best Interest regulation duty as such.” He also noted that the SEC’s request for comment “emphasizes the regulator’s concern about the blurring of the lines between engagement and advice.”


Finsum: As more client interactions occur online, the SEC is trying to determine what constitutes advice and what constitutes engagement.

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